Former police chief commissioner Graham Ashton giving evidence to the inquiry in September.
Sources familiar with the matter have toldThe Age that counsel assisting the inquiry,in their final submissions provided to the parties,maintain their previous narrative that the involvement of security guards was based on a"starting assumption",rather than a clear decision by an individual.
The final submissions of counsel assisting were prepared on November 17,after the further material was provided to the inquiry.
The latest material,published on Friday,puts Victoria’s former top bureaucrat,Chris Eccles,at odds with former police chief Graham Ashton over a telephone conversation they had shortly after a critical,March 27 national cabinet meeting,where the decision to forcibly quarantine all returned travellers was taken.
Neither man has an independent recollection of the conversation,but in a sworn affidavit,Mr Ashton said that based on a subsequent text message he sent to his AFP opposite a few minutes after he hung up,he believed he and Mr Eccles must have discussed the use of private security.
"I believe that at least part of this conversation involved Mr Eccles informing me regarding the potential use of the ADF to guard returned travellers during the transfer from their flights and the use of private security to guard them at the hotels,but my belief as to what he told me in this regard is based only on the inference I draw from the contents of a text message which I sent to AFP Commissioner Reece Kershaw,"Mr Ashton said.